With rising inflation and historically high oil prices, everyone is wondering what Trump's exist strategy is in the war with Iran – We Got This Covered
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Trump has no exit strategy for war with Iran as inflation and surge in oil price looms
Image by Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA 3.0. Via Wikimedia Commons.

With rising inflation and historically high oil prices, everyone is wondering what Trump’s exist strategy is in the war with Iran

Trump and a new endless war all over again.

A week into America’s unsanctioned war with Iran, the bombs are still falling, oil has blown past $100 a barrel, and the question every U.S. ally, senator, and gas station owner wants answered is this: Why is Donald Trump doing this?

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The conflict began on February 28 when airstrikes launched by the U.S. military and Israel took out Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Khamenei. More than 1,300 people are dead, American bases across the Middle East are under a constant barrage by the IRGC, and there is no end for the conflict in sight, with many experts and political analyzers wondering if Trump even has an exit strategy at this point, or whether this will turn into yet another “endless war” in the Middle East, paid by the American taxpayer money.

On Friday, Trump posted to Truth Social that there would be “no deal with Iran except UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER.” Well, the regime is showing no sign of backing down, and just now, they’ve announced Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba, as his successor.

Trump spent the first weeks of his second term crowing about failing gas prices. That argument is now turned on its head, to put it gently. Just as Trump was insisting inflation was on a downward spiral, the war with Iran threatened another price spike.

Inflation was already running above the government’s 2% target before the conflict (per NBC News), and now the global disruption, not to mention the billions of dollars wasted on ammunitions, frontline logistics, and damages to U.S. bases and equipment will only exacerbate the issue.

Gregory Daco, chief economist at EY, put the Fed’s predicament bluntly. The February jobs data and the Iran war are “raising risks on both sides of the dual mandate” simultaneously, with payroll weakness threatening growth while energy prices threaten prices.

The U.S. economy was already struggling with tariffs and declining employment, not to mention the ominous AI bubble, and the Iran war jut stepped on all of those lines at once. Tomorrow, when markets open again, the price of oil could tell us everything Trump’s press briefings won’t.

If you ask the administration, all is well. We’re winning big. The Iranian regime is on the brink of collapse. Their army is in disarray, and their missile capabilities have been obliterated. And yet, everyone is wondering why the fires keep coming from the sky, and why the U.S. has yet to announce an end to hostilities.

Operation Epic Fury. Unconditional surrender. Make Iran Great Again. Whatever Trump calls it, we have a more precise name: expensive.


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Author
Image of Jonathan Wright
Jonathan Wright
Jonathan is a religious consumer of movies, TV shows, video games, and speculative fiction. And when he isn't doing that, he likes to write about them. He can get particularly worked up when talking about 'The Lord of the Rings' or 'A Song of Ice and Fire' or any work of high fantasy, come to think of it.